9 years. That’s how long it’s been
since Laura died. It’s also the term for a Presiding Bishop in the Episcopal
Church. I spent this week in Louisville, Kentucky at the General Convention of
the Episcopal Church and was able to be present for the historic moment when
the House of Deputies affirmed the House of Bishop’s election of a new
Presiding Bishop. I also had the privilege of attending the retirement
celebration dinner for Presiding Bishop Michael Curry. Nine years ago he was
elected. Nine years ago my husband, Jeremiah, was at the General Convention
that elected him in Utah. Nine years ago I was on the phone with him as he took
breaks from the convention work and as I took breaks from the crowded Hospice
room where Laura was fighting for every breath and we both tried to hold it
together because we both loved her. Our Bishop at the time, Mark Hollingsworth
had the House of Bishops pray for Laura. I have always appreciated that, even
more so now that the House of Bishops is community for me in a new way. Sometimes
life falls into cycles. Every time Bishop Curry speaks I find myself filled
with emotion. One reason is because he is a powerful, passionate speaker who
has done amazing things for the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion and
he will be greatly missed. The other reason is because I realize nine years is
a long time. It’s been a long time since
Laura was alive.
The
night after the new Presiding Bishop was elected I had a dream about Laura. She
was coming towards me and she looked very young and as she approached I kept
having realizations that it wasn’t her, it was just someone who looked a lot
like her and every time I realized that I felt a wave of sadness through my
body. I think I had that dream because as I have thought about what to say this
year, I have realized that there is a danger in filling in the pieces of memory
with assumptions and maybe even things I have thought Laura might think or say
or do … because our brains can only hold so much and as much as we try to avoid
it, the memory we have of someone is incomplete. I don’t want to try to make it
complete by guessing what she might think or say or do about things that she
never got to think or say or do. And
yet, I still want to hold onto and honor the memory I do have of her and the
memories all of her many loved ones and friends have of her. And so, I keep
writing every year on this day, knowing that it will fall short of capturing
who she was … but that’s only human.
Laura
brought out an authenticity in myself and others. She did that by always being
so authentically herself. She said the things that needed to be said, even if
it was uncomfortable. She was her same sarcastic, deeply caring, witty self
with everyone, and I think that’s why everyone’s relationship with her was so
meaningful and the loss felt so deeply.
I have
been thinking a lot about authenticity. I thought that being in my forties
would be a time of nicely settling into the life I have built, the
relationships I value and the person I want to be for the rest of my days.
Instead it has felt like upheaval. And not just because of a cross country
move, completely new role in the church and a sometimes fumbled and awkward
approach to introducing myself to loads of new people. It’s also been a wild
ride of hormones, getting to know my body, anxiety and deeply felt emotions
that sometimes scare me. (I hesitated before saying hormones, but if I am going
to honor Laura, then I have to be able to be brutally honest. She faced death,
cancer and unplucked chin hairs with brutal honesty and courage, so surely I
can talk about midlife changes.) So rather than a gentle settling in to the
life patterns I have established and predicted paths I have held, it feels more
like jumping from a plane (and I’m really hoping the parachute works.) And I
have sometimes wondered how to be authentic when I am not really sure who I am
right now.
This is
where I start to do that thing where I want to fill in the blanks of what Laura
might think or do or say and say that she would understand or would tease me
for always worrying, but she didn’t get to see her forties, and that injustice
still makes me sad and angry. What I do know though is how courageously she
faced the upheaval that came into her life. Her kids stayed front and center in
her mind, even when her head was pounding and her heart was breaking. She
wouldn’t let go until I told her they were ok. Her authenticity meant she was
able to ride the changes and tragedies of life with eyes wide open, unwavering
faith and a devotion to her family that surely has made them the wonderful
people they are today. And, she definitely put her foot in her mouth and said
awkward things sometimes.
So
that’s what we do … we face each day
with courage, we hold firm to our faith in a God who is loving and never leaves
us, we continue to love our families fiercely and sometimes we are awkward and
sometimes we mess up. Because life is brutiful but we love love love always
always always.
Grateful for her blog, that helps me remember her: https://publiclookin.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2015-02-03T11:57:00-08:00&max-results=7
❤️ beautifully authentic. So sorry for your loss.
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